Elliott Wave International

Currency

This is a recording of the presentation delivered by Kevin Barry at the World Money Show in London on 10th November 2013.
In this presentation, Kevin discusses how he uses the Commitment Of Traders report as part of his arsenal for trading the FX market. He demonstrates why he thinks that the COT Report is currently signalling a medium to long term decline in the EURUSD.

Most university economics courses still teach a model of banking that hasn’t applied to the real world for decades. Unfortunately, this means that the people who run our economy, most economists and practically all politicians, make decisions that deeply affect our lives based upon abject ignorance of what money is and how it is created.

Our friends over at Positive Money have produced a video course in six parts that will open your eyes to how our banking system really works.

As an introduction to his main presentation on his weekly FX trading strategy, Martin Hatt of the Traders & Investors Club gives us an extremely interesting analysis of today's economic crisis from the perspective of the Latin American crisis of the 1980s.

Are you looking for a FX strategy that you can trade with a time investment of just a couple of hours a week?
If so, then you will not want to miss this presentation where Martin Hatt of the Traders & Investors Club describes how he trades the six major currencies on daily and weekly charts using a simple strategy executed on Sunday evening.

WIth the BofE base rate at its lowest for 300 years and the printing presses already having created the equivalent of £12,000 in new money for every UK household, it is clear that we are still mired in a Keynesian liquidity trap.
Kevin Barry of the Traders & Investors Club will be explaining why he is becoming ever more heavily invested in bonds...............on the short side.

We can see divergences everywhere at the moment. The S&P500 index has been pushing higher without the participation of the European indices nor the trading volume necessary to sustain a genuine bull run.
Kevin Barry of the Traders & Investors Club explains why he thinks that we will be seeing neither hyperinflation nor a booming gold price anytime soon

2012 has not been a good year for stock market bears. Our short positions have been stopped in their tracks and we are currently standing aside dusting ourselves off.
Of course, it would be easy to blame our miscalculations on the fact that successive rounds of Quantitative Easing on both sides of the Atlantic have resulted in a very large increase in liquidity with nowhere for the mountains of cash to go except the stock market. But, that would just be sour grapes, wouldn't it?

We are often asked by both new and experienced traders if they would benefit from one-to-one mentoring with a Trading Coach.
Our answer is that one-to-one mentoring is proven to be the quickest and most successful way to improve your skills in all walks of life from golf and skiing through foreign languages to spiritual enlightenment.

Jeff Boccaccio of the Traders & Investors Club makes a welcome return from his globe-trotting adventures.
In this candid talk drawn from his own personal experience, Jeff will be discussing why he believes that not only can anyone can fit trading into their personal lifestyle but how, for some of us, trading can actually be a lifestyle enabler.

Hans, a middle-aged German tourist on his first visit to Las Vegas, finds the red light district and enters a large brothel. The madam asks him to be seated and sends over a young lady to entertain him.

They sit and talk, frolic a little, giggle a bit, drink a bit, and she sits on his lap.

In this freewheeling and informative presentation, Ashraf demonstrates how his distinct approach to market analysis, based upon his unique ability to bridge the fundamental and technical aspects of the market, has enabled him to make consistently profitable calls in the face of so called 'conventional wisdom'.

October, which is traditionally the most bullish month of the year, especially if we ignore the rather unfortunate statistical aberrations of 1929, 1987 and 2008, has not disappointed those of us who have kept faith in the market recovery. The current consensus amongst Fund Managers is that the market is primed to rally until year-end.
So, the worst is over.
Or is it?